Water is recycled constantly through the ecosystem. That means any water you drank today has been around for millions of years. You could be drinking water that was once drunk by George Washington, the first humans, or even the dinosaurs.

The Water Cycle

Whereas energy flows through an ecosystem, water and elements like carbon and nitrogen are recycled. Water and nutrients are constantly being recycled through the environment. This process through which water or a chemical element is continuously recycled in an ecosystem is called a
biogeochemical cycle
. This recycling process involves both the living organisms (biotic components) and nonliving things (abiotic factors) in the ecosystem. Through biogeochemical cycles, water and other chemical elements are constantly being passed through living organisms to non-living matter and back again, over and over. Three important biogeochemical cycles are the
water cycle
,
carbon cycle
, and
nitrogen cycle
.

The biogeochemical cycle that recycles water is the water cycle. The water cycle involves a series of interconnected pathways involving both the biotic and abiotic components of the biosphere. Water is obviously an extremely important aspect of every ecosystem. Life cannot exist without water. Many organisms contain a large amount of water in their bodies, and many live in water, so the water cycle is essential to life on earth. Water continuously moves between living organisms, such as plants, and non-living things, such as clouds, rivers, and oceans (
Figure
below
).

The water cycle does not have a real starting or ending point. It is an endless recycling process that involves the oceans, lakes and other bodies of water, as well as the land surfaces and the atmosphere. The steps in the water cycle are as follows, starting with the water in the oceans:

Water evaporates from the surface of the oceans, leaving behind salts. As the water vapor rises, it collects and is stored in clouds.

Condensation creates precipitation.
Precipitation
includes rain, snow, hail, and sleet. The precipitation allows the water to return again to the Earth’s surface.

When precipitation lands on land, the water can sink into the ground to become part of our underground water reserves, also known as
groundwater
. Much of this underground water is stored in
aquifers
, which are porous layers of rock that can hold water.

Run-off

Most precipitation that occurs over land, however, is not absorbed by the soil and is called
runoff
. This runoff collects in streams and rivers and eventually flows back into the ocean.

Transpiration

Water also moves through the living organisms in an ecosystem. Plants soak up large amounts of water through their roots. The water then moves up the plant and evaporates from the leaves in a process called
transpiration
. The process of transpiration, like evaporation, returns water back into the atmosphere.

The water cycle.

Vocabulary

aquifer
: Underground layer of rock that stores water.

biogeochemical cycles
: Process through which water or a chemical element is continuously recycled.

carbon cycle
: Pathways through which carbon is recycled through the biosphere.

condensation
: Process in which water vapor changes to tiny droplets of liquid water.

groundwater
: Underground water reserves.

nitrogen cycle
: Pathways through which nitrogen is recycled through the biosphere.

precipitation
: Water that falls from clouds in the atmosphere to Earth's surface, such as rain, snow, and sleet.

runoff
: Precipitation that is not absorbed by the soil and flows over the surface of the ground.

transpiration
: Process in which plants give off water vapor.

water cycle
: Interconnected pathways through which water is recycled through the biotic and abiotic components of the biosphere.